"I hope she gets caught," Belmont said. "I hope she does face a consequence for what she did. Maybe she will learn. Maybe she won't. But she needs to face a consequence for it."

We checked with FSW on Wednesday. The school says while Belmont's card wasn't security-chip enabled, the bank FSW is affiliated with will switch to those soon.

Those chip-enabled cards are supposed to make it harder for criminals, but already crooks have found a way around it.

There are three different security standards used to authenticate chip and pin-enabled credit cards.

The weakest is called "static data authentication." It does not change data from transaction to transaction, so fraudsters can clone it.

Whether the cloned card works also depends on the store's cash register. If it's in "offline" mode, the card will work. If the register is in "online" mode, it performs authentication in real time and the cloned card will likely be rejected.

Anyone with information about the suspect in the pictures can leave an anonymous tip with Southwest Florida Crime Stoppers 1-800-780-TIPS (8477) and qualify for a reward of up to $1,000